MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2019 BAKER CITY HERALD — 3A U.S. Forest Service photo The Granite Gulch fi re burned over about 5,555 acres. Fire managers say the lightning-sparked blaze was benefi cial to the Eagle Cap Wilderness, reducing the amount of fuel on the ground. FIZZLE Continued from Page 1A S. John Collins / Baker City Herald Jordan Remien, fourth from left, has been accepted to attend the American Musical and Dramatic Academy. REMIEN Continued from Page 1A The school has two campuses: a conservatory in New York City, and a College of Performing Arts in Los Angeles. Remien will focus on musical theatre, but he said the school requires a wide variety of performing classes, such as musical theory and dance. “Ballet is the one I’m wor- ried about,” he said. Remien fi rst heard about the Academy when he noticed a poster outside the BHS choir room. He looked it up and discovered the school holds auditions throughout the United States. “I thought, ‘It can’t hurt to sign up,’ ” he said. “Then I forgot about it.” Months later, though, Remien remembered the Academy. He went online to sign up for auditions and dis- covered his name was already entered. The auditions and inter- views were in Portland on Aug. 18. He prepared a one- to two-minute monologue from a play (he chose “I Hate Hamlet”) and a two-minute “I just want to be happy doing something I enjoy.” — Jordan Remien, Baker High School senior who will be attending the American Musical and Dramatic Academy starting in 2020 song from a published musi- cal. His song selection was from “Sunset Boulevard,” which he’d already started rehears- ing with his voice teacher, Allison Mitchell. “I was really nervous be- forehand — I’d never done a full audition like this, and the stakes were high,” he said. Then he just had to wait. “It was a week and a half before I found out anything. It was stressful,” he said. Although it’s still early, right now he’s planning to complete an associate’s at the conservatory in New York, then fi nish with a bachelor’s at the campus in L.A. He would like to get a degree in education, too. “I just want to be happy doing something I enjoy,” he said. Both cities, he said, offer unique experiences in the performing arts — New York is famous for Broadway and off-Broadway plays, while L.A. is more tuned to televi- sion and movies. For now, he must fi nish his senior year. He’s made it to the state choir competition two years in a row in solo and ensemble. “Choir is the class I look forward to,” he said. He’ll continue working with Mitchell. “She’s incredible. She has so much experience,” he said. “I’ve reached different points in singing that I didn’t know existed.” This year will also be fi lled with scholarship applications. But that’s OK because he knows where he’s going. “It’s nice to have it out of the way,” he said. “It takes a huge weight off my shoul- ders.” New York City is a far cry from Baker City — a differ- ence he discovered in the spring of 2018 when the BHS choir raised money for a trip to the Big Apple. “It was incredible. It felt like somewhere I was meant to be,” he said. “I’m ready to step outside my comfort zone.” L OCAL B RIEFING Baker County Democrats have guest speaker on Thursday Baker City Public Art Commission seeking art for public display Eileen Kiely, secretary of the Democratic Party of Oregon and former candidate for the state legislature, will be the guest speaker at the Baker County Democrats’ monthly meet- ing on Thursday, Sept. 19 at Roger Fellowship Hall, 1995 Fourth St., between the Court- house and Baker Middle School. Pizza, coffee and tea will be served at 5:30 p.m., with the meeting starting at 6 p.m. All are welcome. The Baker City Public Art Commission is taking applications for its Art on Loan pro- gram. Artists are invited to lend their work to the city for one year for display at a public location. More information is available by calling Robin Nudd at 541-524-2036, and ap- plications are available at bakercity.com. First review of applications will take place Oct. 9. PLANE — Send briefs to news@bakercityherald.com Guard, using a Chinook helicopter, initiated a search Continued from Page 1A in the general area. A search was launched at At 2 p.m. the Civil Air Pa- that time, one coordinated trol arrived to search the air with the Air Force Rescue using a fi xed wing aircraft. At Coordination Center. 2:19 p.m. the Civil Air Patrol Civil Air Patrol radar data crew spotted plane wreckage. was compiled and a forensic Moments later the Chinook examination of its radar helicopter was overhead and track was conducted. The its crew verifi ed the plane radar track appeared to ter- wreckage. minate at or near Elk Willow The Chinook helicopter Springs in the Limber Jim hovered and maintained its Ridge area. Life Flight fl ew position over the wreckage into the early morning hours and sent GPS coordinates to of Wednesday and attempted ground search units. At 2:26 to locate the crash site using p.m., ground search units ar- night vision equipment, ac- rived at the wreckage site. cording to the UCSO news The US Forest Service release. was then contacted and fi ve A ground search was people from it then created started Sept. 11 at 8 a.m. by an access route to the wreck- the Union County Sheriff’s age site. Offi ce Search and Rescue The National Transporta- unit. Two and a half hours tion Safety Board and the later the Oregon Air National Federal Aviation Adminis- Livingston attributes this year’s success during the initial attack phase to a few fac- tors in addition to fi refi ghters’ prowess. For one, the relative lack of large fi res across much of the West meant fi refi ghting resources, including helicopters and retar- dant planes that can be vital during initial attack, were readily available this summer. “There was not much competition for resources,” Livingston said. The situation was similar over much of Oregon, although there were a few larger blazes, including the 9,700-acre 204 Cow Fire on the Malheur National Forest about 17 miles southwest of Unity. It was sparked by lightning on Aug. 9. Fire danger was lower this summer than last as well, Livingston said. During the summer of 2018, when the Baker City Airport set all-time high temperature records on consecutive August days at 108 and 109 degrees, fuel moistures and other measurements of fi re danger also reached record highs, Livingston said. But because lightning was relatively rare, as refl ected in the record-low number of fi res, the region avoided what could have been a catastrophic fi re season. This summer, by contrast, a damp spring and comparatively cool temperatures kept fi re danger indexes near or below average for most of the season, Livingston said. And the lightning storms, of which there were several, also spawned rain showers that both prevented fuels from turning into tinder and gave fi refi ghters an assist. “Almost without exception the lightning storms came through with moisture,” Livingston said. One of Livingston’s colleagues, Steve Meyer, agrees that the combination — rela- tively moist fuels and rain — contributed greatly to placid behavior of most fi res this summer. “We were fairly busy off and on with lightning fi res but there was enough rain with the storms that came through that they all stayed small for us,” said Meyer, who is the wildland fi re supervisor for the Oregon Department of Forestry in Baker County. Meyer said this is the only summer he can remember during his 23-year career in which the fi re danger never reached the “extreme” level. The Forestry Department’s Baker unit has reported six lightning fi res and one hu- man-caused fi re this season. The agency’s “There was enough rain with the storms that came through that (the fi res) all stayed small for us.” — Steve Meyer, wildland fi re supervisor, Oregon Department of Forestry La Grande unit handled 12 lightning and four human-caused blazes, and the Wal- lowa unit 22 lightning and six human fi res. The lack of human-caused fi res in the Baker unit — only one this year — was welcome, Meyer said. Al Crouch, fi re mitigation/education spe- cialist for the BLM’s Vale District, echoed that sentiment. There have been nine human-caused fi res on the Vale District this year, which burned 535 acres. That’s below the District’s 10-year aver- age of 13 human fi res, and it ends a three- year stretch with more of those blazes than average, including 18 in both 2017 and 2018, Crouch said. Fire managers fear human-caused fi res because they’re so unpredictable, Meyer said. Offi cials can track lightning strikes by computer almost in real time, and divert fi re crews relatively quickly to new blazes, he said. But a fi re started by a person, whether intentionally or by accident, can show up without any warning. “You just have no way of knowing when something like that’s going to happen,” Meyer said. Crouch said that despite a couple of intense lightning storms, the number of downstrikes on the Vale District was below the 10-year average. So was the number of lightning fi res, although the difference was not large — 30 blazes this year compared with a 10-year average (2009-18) of 35. This year’s fi res didn’t burn nearly as many acres as in many years in the past decade, however. The 2019 total of 4,435 acres burned by lightning fi res compares with the 10-year average of 158,000 acres. “It’s been a different kind of summer,” Crouch said. “We had a couple of events with lightning and fi res, but when you’ve got rain with those cells it helps knock those fi res down.” Crouch said he expects that there were a number of what fi re managers call “natural out” blazes — ones ignited by lightning but are doused by rain before anyone reports them. “Youʼll love the work we do. I guarantee it.” - JR 225 H Street • East of I-84 • 541-523-3200 • grumpysrepair.com tration will be investigating the crash. The type of plane Koep- pen was fl ying has not been released but according to a preliminary FAA report the pilot Koeppen had a 1968 PA-32-300 fi xed wing single-engine Piper aircraft registered in his name. Radar data indicates that Koeppen’s plane crashed after making a rapid descent from an altitude of 6,600 feet. 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